By Marius Zaharia
LONDON (Reuters) - Metal prices hit multi-year lows on Friday as weaker-than-expected data from China and the euro zone raised concerns about global growth, but the U.S. dollar rose on the prospects of a Federal Reserve interest rate hike.
Copper
The flash Caixin/Markit China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) contracted for the fifth straight month, and faster than economists polled by Reuters had estimated.
Euro zone business activity also started the second half on a less secure footing than expected, hit by Greece's near-bankruptcy. Markit's flash PMI fell to 53.7 this month from June's four-year high of 54.2. A Reuters poll had predicted a more modest dip to 54.0.
While economies looked weaker in Europe and Asia, better-than-expected U.S. jobless claims kept the Federal Reserve on track for a rate increase in coming months.
The U.S. dollar was 0.4 percent higher against a basket of currencies, trading at 97.489 <.DXY>. U.S. stock futures
"What a conundrum we face: Commodities are shouting that the global economy is deteriorating, key emerging markets are already seeing major volatility, and yet the world's most important central bank is close to tightening monetary policy," Michael Every, head of financial market research for Asia at Rabobank.
In a busy day for corporate updates on Friday, BASF
British telecom firm Vodafone
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 <.FTEU3> hit a one-week low early in the day , but quickly rebounded to trade 0.2 percent higher at 1582.22. Euro zone bond yields fell. [GVD/EUR]
"Historically the ECB (European Central Bank) has said it would do whatever it takes to save the euro, it has launched quantitative easing to support the euro zone and investors have faith that they will continue to be supportive if there are signs of weakness," said Alastair McCaig, market analyst at IG.
The Australian dollar, often used as a liquid proxy for China trades, hit a six-year trough of $0.7269
London
China looks set to further reduce interest rates and the amount of cash its banks must hold as reserves to try to keep its economy growing at 7 percent this year, which would be the slowest pace in a quarter of a century, a Reuters poll showed on Thursday.
The euro dipped fell 0.3 percent to 1.0944
Gold
Oil prices neared four-month lows. Brent crude
Brent has lost nearly 13 percent in July, its largest one-month fall since a near 19 percent loss in January.
(Additional reporting by Saikat Chatterjee in Hong Kong, Patrick Graham and John Geddie in London; Editing by Hugh Lawson)